lpetrich
Contributor
Cristina Alesci on Twitter: "“Maybe @BernieSanders shouldn’t exist,” says Blackstone’s Schwarzman in response to @alansmurray asking him to defend billionaires, which Sanders says should NOT exist https://t.co/YG5tHoSz3K" / Twitter
then
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Twitter: "“Billionaires should not exist” does not mean certain people should not exist.
It means no person should have a billion dollars.
The ascent of billionaires is a symptom & outcome of an immoral system that tells people affordable insulin is impossible but exploitation is fine. https://t.co/fjxKOGIdc2" / Twitter
I think that that is excessive, but I do think that excessive wealth concentrations are bad for society and bad for democracy. That is because the owners of that concentrated wealth can much more easily buy political access than the rest of the population.
Public Citizen on Twitter: ".@AOC thinks concentrated wealth is incompatible with democracy. So did our founders. It's time to #TaxTheRich. https://t.co/GdTDC7mdWw" / Twitter
AOC’s Call For Abolishing Billionaires Is Deeply American
then
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Twitter: "“Billionaires should not exist” does not mean certain people should not exist.
It means no person should have a billion dollars.
The ascent of billionaires is a symptom & outcome of an immoral system that tells people affordable insulin is impossible but exploitation is fine. https://t.co/fjxKOGIdc2" / Twitter
I think that that is excessive, but I do think that excessive wealth concentrations are bad for society and bad for democracy. That is because the owners of that concentrated wealth can much more easily buy political access than the rest of the population.
Public Citizen on Twitter: ".@AOC thinks concentrated wealth is incompatible with democracy. So did our founders. It's time to #TaxTheRich. https://t.co/GdTDC7mdWw" / Twitter
AOC’s Call For Abolishing Billionaires Is Deeply American
That article also mentionedAfter popularizing the idea of a 70 percent top marginal tax rate earlier this month, the freshman congresswoman recently suggested that the mere existence of billionaires was both immoral, and a threat to American democracy. “I do think that a system that allows billionaires to exist when there are parts of Alabama where people are still getting ringworm because they don’t have access to public health is wrong,” Ocasio-Cortez told the writer Ta-Nehisi Coates, during an interview on Martin Luther King Day. One day later, the congresswoman approvingly quoted an op-ed by the economists Gabriel Zucman and Emmanuel Saez, which argued that the purpose of high taxes on the wealthy wasn’t merely to generate revenue, but rather, to safeguard “democracy against oligarchy.”
His proposed solution?In a letter to James Madison, Jefferson wrote that the extremity of European inequality was not only morally suspect, but economically inefficient. Aristocrats had grown so wealthy, they were happy to leave their lands uncultivated, even as masses of idle workers were eager to improve it. Thus, these proto-billionaires undermined both the peasants’ ability to transcend mere subsistence, and their society’s capacity to develop economically.
Thus endorsing progressive taxation. So if AOC is un-American, then Thomas Jefferson was un-American.Another means of silently lessening the inequality of property is to exempt all from taxation below a certain point, and to tax the higher portions of property in geometrical progression as they rise.
... But it is not too soon to provide by every possible means that as few as possible shall be without a little portion of land. The small landholders are the most precious part of a state.
Jefferson's ideal was everybody owning their own land, and approximately equal lots of land at that.And while that strain might have been marginal among the leaders of the American Revolution, it was pervasive among its foot soldiers (there’s a reason the leading propagandist of the war effort, Thomas Paine, was one of the earliest champions of an American welfare state).
Regardless, Ocasio-Cortez’s second argument against the existence of billionaires — that concentrated wealth is incompatible with genuine democracy — was something close to conventional wisdom among the founders (including those who opposed democracy).
America’s first political theorists took these truths to be self-evident: that a person could not exercise political liberty if he did not possess a modicum of economic autonomy, and that disparities in wealth inevitably produced disparities of political power.
They seemed to prefer an aristocratic sort of republicanism - democracy limited to upper-class people and maybe also upper-middle-class people.Critically, relatively few of the founders saw these premises in a progressive light. To many 18th-century American elites, the fact that the propertyless lacked the capacity to exercise genuine political freedom was not an argument for giving them property, but rather, for denying them the franchise. Similarly, the notion that true democracy couldn’t coexist with wealth inequality struck many leaders of the early republic as an argument against democracy.